Two suburban Philadelphia prep school graduates established a network of dealers to peddle drugs at Lafayette College and seven other Pennsylvania schools, authorities said today.

Neil Scott, 25, and Timothy Brooks, 18, allegedly sought to use their sports connections and business acumen to establish a monopoly on drug sales to high school students in Philadelphia’s affluent Main Line suburbs.

Among those charged are two men with ties to Lafayette in Easton: one, a student, and the other, a recent dropout, officials said.

Scott and Brooks are graduates of The Haverford School, a $35,000-a-year institution where both played lacrosse. They tapped their sports and social networks to help further their enterprise, officials said.

“They were using very traditional business principles,” Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman said. “To take those skills and turn it into this kind of illegal enterprise is very distressing.”

Scott, Brooks and several others arrested in the alleged ring were arraigned today before District Judge Kathleen Valentine on drug charges and related counts.

The dealers at Lafayette were identified as student Christian Stockton Euler, 23, of Lower Merion Township, Pa., and John Cole Rosemann, 20, of Weston, Conn. Both were arraigned on multiple felonies.

Northampton County District Attorney John Morganelli said he and his office cooperated in the investigation but agreed to let Ferman’s office proceed with the prosecution.

One charged locally

Rosemann was also charged March 12 in Northampton County with drug possession with intent to deliver. Police issued a search warrant of college property in relation to that arrest, he said.

During the March 12 search of his dorm room, Rosemann was found to be in possession of a little more than an ounce of marijuana, according to court records.

He was questioned by Montgomery County Drug Task Force officials regarding an alleged drug-law violation before he allowed Lafayette police to search the dorm room, court records say; he voluntarily handed over a glass jar containing the 33.56 grams of marijuana.

Lafayette has a clear policy prohibiting students from possessing any drugs that would violate Pennsylvania state law, said Clow, the college spokesman. The college is always reviewing its security and drug policies on an ongoing basis, he said, and these arrests will not change that.

“The most important thing here is the health and safety of the students here in the campus community,” Clow said. “There’s no higher priority.”

Rosemann was arraigned March 24 on the March 12 charges before District Judge Richard Yetter and released on $25,000 unsecured bail, court documents say. He was released today on $100,000 unsecured bail.

Court records did not indicate a bail amount for Euler. He and Rosemann both face preliminary hearings scheduled next month before Valentine in Lower Merion Township.

Rosemann’s attorney, West Chester, Pa.-based Raymond Tarnowski, did not immediately return a message left after hours at his office seeking comment. No attorney could be found for Euler, and a woman who answered the phone at his house said he was unavailable.

The attorney for Scott, the alleged co-ring leader, declined to comment, saying he hadn’t yet reviewed the case.

Brooks’ attorney, Greg Pagano, described his client as vulnerable and a bit depressed after leaving the University of Richmond last year due to an unspecified injury. Brooks lives at his family’s home in Villanova.

Scott, of Haverford, began selling pot after he moved back to the area from San Diego, where he had worked at a medical marijuana dispensary, officials said. Scott told police that he figured the high-quality drug from California “would sell very well on the Main Line because everyone between 15 and 55 loves good weed,” an investigator wrote in the affidavit.

Scott began having the drug mailed to Pennsylvania in late 2013 and called his enterprise the “Main Line Take Over Project,” authorities said. Officials began an investigation in January based on a tip and executed search warrants between Feb. 28 and April 9 at nine locations.

In all, they reported seizing eight pounds of pot, more than $11,000, an assault weapon, two other guns and equipment to manufacture hash oil. Scott has been in custody since February, held on $1 million bail.

Authorities didn’t calculate the total value of the operation, but Scott told police he was making about $1,000 per week on marijuana alone, the affidavit said.

Ferman, the district attorney, said the investigation continues. So far, eight suspects have been arrested, and authorities say at least three more are involved.

Along with the colleges, the high schools targeted in the ring were The Haverford School, Lower Merion High School, Harriton High School, Conestoga High School and Radnor High School.